Hakeem Olajuwon - Scoring Skills

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  • čas přidán 6. 12. 2012
  • Spotlighting some of Hakeem's many, many moves (updated version).
    Hakeem Olajuwon Post Moves Footwork Dream Shake Houston Rockets Fakes Spin Move Highlights Hooks Dunks Baseline Crossover Fadeaways David Robinson Shaq Patrick Ewing NBA playoffs LeBron James Carmelo Anthony Javale McGee Amare Stoudemire 1993 1994 1995 TNT
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Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @rerezzzy1610
    @rerezzzy1610 Před 10 lety +96

    He truly is a guard stuck in a center's body.

  • @elnardowebster2842
    @elnardowebster2842 Před 7 lety +76

    Low post moves - Best ever
    Blocks - Best ever
    Steals - Best ever
    Running - top 3 ever
    Crossover - in his own league
    Clutch - as clutch as they come
    Elegance - Ballerina

    • @ArtietheArchon
      @ArtietheArchon Před 7 lety +4

      don't forget the 19 foot range, team leadership and longevity/durability

    • @joeclark1258
      @joeclark1258 Před 7 lety

      Elnardo Webster not best at steals or running

    • @elnardowebster2842
      @elnardowebster2842 Před 7 lety

      running can be arguable, steals are not. He's n 9 all time. Next center is David Robinson at n 56. That gives you an idea.

    • @ArtietheArchon
      @ArtietheArchon Před 7 lety

      I really don't think Hakeem was athletically great, perhaps only "good" athletically quickness jumping etc but nobody and I mean nobody made more out of what they were given physically

    • @elnardowebster2842
      @elnardowebster2842 Před 7 lety +4

      7 footer who dances on the floor, runs as good as anybody, strong as an oak, and you call him not a great athlete? Bro drop that pot, it's hurting your synapses really.

  • @wwbdwwbd
    @wwbdwwbd Před 7 lety +116

    His footwork is better than even Jordan's. He's just on another level all by himself, and he's a center!

    • @omariraqiman
      @omariraqiman Před 5 měsíci

      just like ali !

    • @TheBrett04
      @TheBrett04 Před 4 měsíci +2

      All due to his time playing soccer. The man was simply on another level athletically.

    • @AnHebrewChild
      @AnHebrewChild Před měsícem

      I wouldn't say his footwork is better than Jordan's

  • @cooljhags7356
    @cooljhags7356 Před 10 lety +431

    Averaging over 20 points and 10 rebounds in each of his first 12 seasons in the league, Hakeem's numbers are out of this world. As the NBA's all-time leading shot-blocker and eighth on the career steals list (by far the highest for a center), “The Dream” can say with conviction that he was the greatest defensive center ever.
    As impressive as the numbers are, they don't do Olajuwon justice. Hakeem played the game with an elegance that had to be seen to be believed.
    He had impeccable footwork on the low block and a silky-smooth jump shot. The power and grace with which he went about his business were breathtaking. On top of that he was the ultimate teammate.
    Hakeem Olajuwon was the greatest combination of size, power, and grace the game has ever seen.
    Numbers are only part of what made Olajuwon so incredible, as a few other post players have put up tremendous stats. It was not only the two championships he won in 1994 and 1995; many great big men won NBA titles.
    It was the way he won those championships, annihilating everyone in his path on the way to those rings that makes me say Olajuwon is the best center in the history of the game.
    For two seasons, the incredible raw athleticism Hakeem possessed joined forces with a finally 100 percent evolved skill set to devastate the league.
    Hakeem took home most of the NBA's hardware in the 1993-94 season. Olajuwon became the only player in history to win the regular season MVP, Defensive Player of the Year, and the Finals MVP in the same season.
    On the way to his first title, Olajuwon and the Rockets knocked out Charles Barkley and the defending Western Conference Champion Phoenix Suns in seven games. In the decisive Game 7 with everything on the line, Olajuwon went for an incredible 37 points, 17 rebounds, five assists and three blocks.
    After making short work of Karl Malone and the Utah Jazz in the Western Conference Finals, Houston defeated the New York Knicks in seven games to win the NBA championship.
    Olajuwon could have went to jail for what he did to Hall of Famer Patrick Ewing in the series, holding the career 50 percent shooter to a miserable 36 percent from the field and outscoring him in every single contest.
    Highlights from Game 5 vs. the Spurs in the 1995 Western Conference Finals
    The 1994-95 regular season was a tumultuous one for the Rockets, as they won only 47 games despite Olajuwon's 27.8 points per game. For the second consecutive season, "The Dream" was Houston`s lone All-Star. Receiving only the sixth seed in the west, the Rockets faced a seemingly impossible road to defend their title.
    In the first round of the 1995 playoffs, the Rockets took down a 60-win Utah Jazz team despite being heavy underdogs, and in the conference semifinals they needed another seven games to defeat Barkley and the Phoenix Suns for the second straight year.
    Olajuwon performed magnificently in each of the first two rounds; neither of which the Rockets were expected to win. The next series, however, is where Olajuwon went from a superstar to an immortal.
    The San Antonio Spurs had the NBA's best record in 1994-95 at 62-20 and were the favorites to win the title. Their leader, regular-season MVP David Robinson received his trophy (won by Olajuwon the year before) in front of Hakeem prior to Game 2 of the series.
    Big Mistake. Robinson was a terrific player, but nowhere near Olajuwon's level at that time and Olajuwon proved it by humiliating the "Admiral."
    After watching the trophy celebration, Olajuwon shut everyone in San Antonio up by tossing in 41 points to go with 16 rebounds, four assists, three steals and two blocks. He followed that up in Game 3 with 43 points, 11 rebounds, four assists and four blocks. After four games, the series was tied at two games apiece.
    In a pivotal Game 5 on the road against the best team in the league, “The Dream” picked up his game even more. Forty-two points, nine rebounds, eight assists and five blocked shots later, Robinson was left shaking his head.
    Olajuwon had played Robinson like a puppet with a dazzling display of post moves, jump shots and crossover dribbles. He did the same in Game 6, dropping 39 and 17 to go along with five more blocks to close out the series.
    The 1995 Finals were no contest. The Rockets swept the great Shaquille O'Neal and the Orlando Magic in a series in which Olajuwon outscored Shaq in every game, never scoring less than 30 points. Like Robinson and Ewing, Shaq was simply outclassed.
    To put this in perspective, over his consecutive championship runs, Hakeem destroyed the three best centers in his era in Patrick Ewing, David Robinson, and Shaquille O'Neal.
    In 17 total matchups, Olajuwon was never outscored in a game by any of those three. During this two-year period, Olajuwon was at the peak of his powers. Offensively and defensively, it was the highest level any center has ever reached.
    That is why Hakeem Olajuwon is the best center who ever played the game.

    • @Ownerofthepaint
      @Ownerofthepaint Před 10 lety +40

      People forget Hakeem went head to head with two of the greatest teams ever in 1986. Magic and Bird in back to back series and almost took both of them out in his 2nd year. I completely agree with you!

    • @cooljhags7356
      @cooljhags7356 Před 10 lety +7

      John H Yeah almost forgot

    • @thetruth4829
      @thetruth4829 Před 9 lety +37

      Your argument is not complete bro. He won his championships with role players. He had no sidekick or superstar.

    • @cooljhags7356
      @cooljhags7356 Před 9 lety +18

      THE TRUTH in 1995 he had Drexler.

    • @thetruth4829
      @thetruth4829 Před 9 lety +17

      Christopher Jhagroo He won before he got Drexler. Remember Drexler was also not at his prime when he joined Hakeem

  • @RRRRRRRRR33
    @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 9 lety +693

    His defense is twice as good as this. No question, the guy is the greatest center in basketball history, talentwise it's not even close.

    • @Lexgluger01
      @Lexgluger01 Před 9 lety +15

      ***** He was actually 6'10. It just adds more lore to his accomplishments.

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 9 lety +26

      Visually, it was clear that Ewing and Robinson are taller than Hakeem. Both are authentic 7 footer. Hakeem has a big wingspan, so it seems that he is a 7 footer but he is indeed 6'10. He looked small against almost every center back them, even against Alonzo (for example) who is another 6'10 center.

    • @rodvincetolosa9386
      @rodvincetolosa9386 Před 8 lety +7

      Rafael Teles not talent wise but skill wise his low post moves were just too good

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 8 lety +4

      ***** I really don't know for sure. He looked bigger than Malone, but smaller than Alonzo.

    • @elai3147
      @elai3147 Před 8 lety +3

      +Rafael Teles you are right, karl was 6-9, thorpe was 6-10, both hakeem and alonzo were only 6-9 1/2 or 6-9 3/4, but neither were undersized and both had 7 footer wingspans, hakeem could also jump elbows at the rim high

  • @dragonair109
    @dragonair109 Před 9 lety +57

    Imagine Hakeem in today's NBA. He dominated in a time of really good centers. There are very few elite centers right now. He would literally be an unstoppable god on the court.

  • @wwbdwwbd
    @wwbdwwbd Před 8 lety +153

    His footwork around the post is better than even MJ's. Absolutely peerless.

    • @redeemed1079
      @redeemed1079 Před 2 lety

      debatable
      i think kobe, mj, willis, reed in terms of block skill

    • @IsaacAndrade666
      @IsaacAndrade666 Před 2 lety +5

      @@redeemed1079
      1) Kobe went to dream to learn the baseline fadeaway and never perfected it like dream did...video on CZcams
      2) MJs own son asked MJ if there was anyone who gave him problems. MJ said that he didn't want any part of the african over there...interview from 2021

    • @dacoldest3896
      @dacoldest3896 Před 2 lety +6

      The dream is the only guy i would take over MJ

    • @sultan111111
      @sultan111111 Před rokem +1

      Of course sincr he is a soccer player too

    • @paulgeorge9228
      @paulgeorge9228 Před rokem

      @@dacoldest3896 like in the draft lol

  • @tenki1
    @tenki1 Před 10 lety +100

    Strength. Speed. Skills. Shooting touch. Fades left. Fades right. Feints either way. Hook shot. Jump shot. Dunk. Crossover. Bank shot. Spins both directions. Scores with back to the basket/face up. Reverse layups. Uses both hands. Rebounds. Blocks. Knows to read double teams. Great 1 on 1/team defender. Left/right side of the court. Decent range. Hell, who needs a blind layup? Oh I quit, he did that as well.

    • @neal6473
      @neal6473 Před 6 lety +8

      tenki1 That's good tenki1 you did your homework on Hakeem but you forgot one important thing that he was great in and when he started applying to his game and the rockets started winning championships that was when he became a great passer when his assist went up and everybody was scoring and the defense didn't know what to do so they didn't know weather to double Hakeem and let him pass the ball to Kenny Smith and let him burn you with a 3 or to let Hakeem just dominate you so a lot of teams what play just man to man defense on Olajuwon to just get burn with the two weather then the three and that's one reason why he was so great because he can change the defense and he was a great passer.

    • @jacobjones5269
      @jacobjones5269 Před 4 lety

      neal6473
      The only bone I’d pick with your post is I wouldn’t ever call him a great passer.. He was always a great rebounder and OUTLET passer, which I’d why the Rockets could always run on anyone.. But the team got better, as you say, when he bought in and became a willing passer out of the block.. And he was effective, for the most part doing so, although Seattle’s defense gave him fits..
      But being effective as a passer was what put that team over the top, offensively, no doubt.. With Olajuwon, their defense, the easy buckets in the running game, AND the ability to do lethal damage from deep, that team became tough to beat.. The chemistry was amazing, too..

    • @IsaacAndrade666
      @IsaacAndrade666 Před 2 lety +1

      AND doing all that with class

    • @mja91352
      @mja91352 Před rokem

      And only two rings ...

    • @msl5253
      @msl5253 Před rokem

      @@jacobjones5269
      Hakeem, had no choice to pass with the Rudy T teams, cause the entire team was based on passing the ball out with the shooters. Obviously, Rudy knew Hakeem had to be able to pass in order to do that.
      And if you watch his early games (first, 2nd year in the league) he made some nifty passes, when he was already into his offense or dribbling facing the basket, as players cut or were open. So, though he didn't pass a lot in his early years (comparatively speaking). It appears, the same court vision and instinct that allowed Dream to play such good defense/great offensive moves, was available to him in recognizing teammates to pass the ball to. So, that let's me know he always had that ability, and he wasn't deficient in it. This is probably why Rudy knew he could do that with him. Think about it?
      Now, I'm not calling him Kareem, Sabonis, or even Wilt with the passing. However, I I think Hakeem's certainly ahead of the likes of Shaq; Ewing; Malone, etc., when it comes to passing .
      But yes: He threw some nice outlet passes, many times to the opposite basket on a dime.

  • @jamesanderson1687
    @jamesanderson1687 Před 10 lety +116

    I've never seen an NBA Center with these kind of moves.

    • @tustari
      @tustari Před 10 lety +16

      west jack Lol al jefferson! Dude looks like his feet are stuck in mud compared to Hakeem

    • @goldenstateswarriorsbandwa4842
      @goldenstateswarriorsbandwa4842 Před 6 lety +1

      west jack you're crazy

    • @deafboricua21
      @deafboricua21 Před 5 lety +1

      That’s why I always considered Hakeem the most skilled center in NBA history.

    • @44anml226
      @44anml226 Před 3 lety +3

      @-- embiid is more similar to patrick ewing

    • @asroma5216
      @asroma5216 Před 3 lety

      now you saw it

  • @ladistar
    @ladistar Před 9 lety +304

    It's crazy, he doesn't even move like a center. It's almost like watching MJ or Lebron, the way he plays the game. How come he doesn't get more recognition? Top 2-3 center of all time, no doubt.

    • @Waynehwang17
      @Waynehwang17 Před 9 lety +10

      If he plays today. He could be top 3 center.

    • @TEXASPETEBOY223
      @TEXASPETEBOY223 Před 8 lety +11

      Wayne Hwang yes. perhaps the best!

    • @TEXASPETEBOY223
      @TEXASPETEBOY223 Před 8 lety +21

      ladistar agreed, most underrated big man that ever played. it's inane, this guy's talent is ridiculous....I think there is also some merit in the fact that Jordan selected Hakeem as his center in his personal all-time starting five lineup tho.

    • @noname-mp1sn
      @noname-mp1sn Před 8 lety +22

      Not Lebron tho

    • @goatboytone1
      @goatboytone1 Před 8 lety +23

      He's consistently rated as one of the top 5 centres of all time.

  • @cywait
    @cywait Před 8 lety +20

    The precision of his footwork is just absurd. Spin moves, crossovers, pump fakes, turn around jumpers AND to top it all off... He plays defense. As far as big men, he's the G.O.A.T. in my book.

  • @chebbou69
    @chebbou69 Před 10 lety +53

    A lot a people are trying to replicate Hakeem's footwork but what they don't get is that Olajuwon developed this kind of agility on his lower body cause growing up in Nigeria he started as a soccer player before switching to basketball.

    • @universexf6
      @universexf6 Před 10 lety +2

      Yeah, I agree 100%. Plus, when you look at his shooting style closely, his shot is like amost Jordan. Semi-fadaway? I think.

    • @CarbonComs
      @CarbonComs Před 9 lety

      Embiid next Hakeem Olajuwan confirmed

    • @RobShelley84
      @RobShelley84 Před 9 lety +8

      Tomono Kentaro Looking at his highlights, he kinda looks like a 7' Michael Jordan, doesn't he? As if Michael grew 6'' taller and played the post!

    • @manhalfamazing00
      @manhalfamazing00 Před 5 lety +4

      A 7ft soccer player.... yeah I thing he made the right choice switching sports

    • @jimmyfashola
      @jimmyfashola Před 3 lety

      @@CarbonComs not even close

  • @davidweiss3042
    @davidweiss3042 Před 8 lety +18

    I grew up watching this guy. I forgot how awesome he was. You never see a big man with moves like that anymore. I miss you "Dream"

    • @nastypiglosi1788
      @nastypiglosi1788 Před 7 měsíci

      There's never been a big man with moves like that ever

  • @elvero666
    @elvero666 Před 7 lety +133

    always felt like he was the 6"11 version of MJ.. his moves were so fluid

    • @larryking5893
      @larryking5893 Před 7 lety +18

      his footwork was impeccable

    • @leroyglam3920
      @leroyglam3920 Před 7 lety +12

      Skim Charles: Thanks bro - totally agree. MJ and Dream had bodies as close to perfect as you'll get for hoops. Both smooth, agile and explosive. The two best ever for me.

    • @joepermenter7228
      @joepermenter7228 Před 5 lety +2

      Hakeem's 7 feet exactly.

    • @feelcollins4358
      @feelcollins4358 Před 5 lety +1

      The dude is also master of fakes, plays with his opponent's psychology so well lmfao.

    • @joepermenter7228
      @joepermenter7228 Před 4 lety

      @1995 GetJiggyWitIt I had a Rookie card of Akeem at 7'3. Video games list him at 7'2. He doesn't look shorter than the centers he made look like chumps. He's 7 feet tall.

  • @DerkuiDerkui
    @DerkuiDerkui Před 6 lety +8

    This man has taught many players how to post like Kobe and Lebron. Greatest post player of all time! Best footwork of all time!

  • @6266jamal
    @6266jamal Před 10 lety +20

    No disrespect to Kareem shaq wilt bill or any other centers but Hakeem is my favorite and all time. Best in my opinion

  • @hellotheremyolfriend
    @hellotheremyolfriend Před 7 lety +458

    Bruh can do crossovers as a center. The hell? Lol

    • @kingbanksss
      @kingbanksss Před 7 lety +43

      looool 😂😂Trusttt me he's too good

    • @gellermicael99
      @gellermicael99 Před 7 lety +70

      dawg peep that hezzo fake-pullup... that move straight outta NC lol... he was a complete player... its sad we have dudes like DJ being all-stars with 0 post-moves

    • @TheLucky7z
      @TheLucky7z Před 7 lety +7

      It's all basic fundamentals

    • @nekronbeast3981
      @nekronbeast3981 Před 6 lety +7

      kingbanksss I know lol a center breakin ankles in shit

    • @ernestmccaleb3545
      @ernestmccaleb3545 Před 4 lety +16

      @@TheLucky7z NOTHING basic about that.

  • @trinihaze3127
    @trinihaze3127 Před 10 lety +49

    Most skilled big man ever!

    • @peterguidry6084
      @peterguidry6084 Před 4 lety +1

      @Ashok Hegde kareem has a longer career,more Accolades and the skyhook but if you watched this video or seen Olajuwon live then you would understand there is no center that has ever done things with a basketball quite like Hakeem....Olajuwon is the most complete and skilled center ever.
      I watched Kareem...and as great as he was, he wasnt as graceful, didnt have the same footwork, jumpshot, array of moves, crossovers, or quickness Olajuwon had.
      Just because Kareem won more rings or played for the Lakers doesnt make him the better player.
      I think people are too stubborn to Acknowledge Olajuwon over Kareem or Russell, or even Wilt because he played in Houston and not a historic or bigger market team such as Lakers or Celtics.
      Also people rely too heavily on what you accomplished instead of the skillset.....the problem is accomplishments many times coincide with who you played with to get you those accomplishments or Era.

    • @peterguidry6084
      @peterguidry6084 Před 4 lety +1

      @Ashok Hegde
      Olajuwon is in almost everyone's conversation when it comes to all time greats.
      And when it comes to down to mentioning the Best centers ever...the names are always Kareem, Hakeem, Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, and Shaq.
      Shaq even said Olajuwon was better than him and Jordan and his whole family places Olajuwon as the top center ever and in his personal top 5 players.
      Olajuwon is noted for having the best footwork ever of any center....not kareem.
      Olajuwon is the NBA shot Blocking leader in history...not kareem, that is why nobody heard that before. Now people speculate if Wilt or Bill had more shot blocks but this is because they didnt keep that Record back then.
      No center in NBA history could dribble like a guard and cross players over with that kind of handles....out of all kareem games I watched, I never seen him cross anybody up.
      He was lanky, but had different types of hook shots, including the skyhook. But Olajuwon put players in a spin cycle.
      Even gary payton said no one had an answer for him and he was unguardable.
      Olajuwon dominated or bested more dominate centers and power forwards than almost any center ever...this list includes.
      David Robinson, Patrick Ewing, Alonzo Mourning, Dikembe Mutombo, shaquille Oneal, Brad Daughtery, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Bill Walton, Robert Parish, Rik Smitts, karl Malone, Charles Barkley, shawn Kemp, Kevin Mchale and a young Kevin Garnett.
      In 86 Rockets with Olajuwon almost beat both the Lakers and Celtics in one single playoff run...
      They beat the Lakers in 5 when it was the showtime Lakers who featured a prime Magic Johnson, James Worthy, and an older Kareem.
      Rockets went on to challenge the mighty Celtics to 6 games before losing.
      But the celtics had about 5 hall of famers including Bird on one team at the same time.
      You want to know the whole truth after that...
      Ralph Sampson got hurt for the Rockets and two other good Rockets players got busted for drugs and got kicked out the league. So Rockets never got to their full potential....this is the reason Rockets got bounced early in the playoffs because the only good player left was Olajuwon.
      This was no fault of his.
      It wasnt until the window between 93 through 96 that the Rockets were ready to win a title. And they won in 94 and 95.
      Many people believe that the Rockets had the personnel to beat the Bulls had they met in 93 or 94. But it never happened. So it is hypothetical.
      You bash Olajuwon for having a stacked College team for the year that was the phi slamma jamma....but did you know the coach changed the gameplan and it costed them the championship. Look it up.
      In the NBA Olajuwon won titles... But he didnt win enough rings because the GM hardly ever put any great players around Olajuwon to win.
      Olajuwon is in rare territory as a superstar to win a title as the only superstar on his team in 94. An older drexler came in 95. By the time barkley came to Houston...thet were all old and not the same players anymore.
      Didnt most of Kareems championships came playing alongside prime magic?

    • @peterguidry6084
      @peterguidry6084 Před 4 lety +1

      @Ashok Hegde
      Also. Why do people criticize Olajuwon for not winning enough rings...is it his fault he never played with a prime scottie Pippen....what about playing with 5 hall of famers like Bird, or Shaq playing alongside Kobe to get multiple of rings as examples.
      We glorify great players achievements which is rightfully so....but do we take into account if that great player played with other great players to achieve championships and accolades.
      If you based it only on skill set....with no other great player playing alongside Olajuwon.
      Imagine how great Olajuwon had to be just to make it as far as he did.
      He had the total package.
      IQ
      Defense
      Shot blocking
      Freethrows
      Footwork
      Steals
      Offensive repertoire
      Mid range shot
      Rebounds
      Passing out the post
      Quickness
      Cross over
      And a signature move ( dream shake)

  • @gregjames970
    @gregjames970 Před 6 lety +23

    Clearly the best center of all time

  • @jamescatholic7
    @jamescatholic7 Před 8 lety +128

    ...just as good on defense. Creative, graceful, versatile, intelligent, assist man, made incredibly difficult shots, loyal, leader, what else?

    • @goodman5836
      @goodman5836 Před 8 lety +39

      CHAMPION!

    • @fredfells209
      @fredfells209 Před 8 lety +26

      just as good?? just as good.. He's better on defense.. All time Blocks Leader.. only center in top 10 in steals.. rebounds of all time!!

    • @socialminds9894
      @socialminds9894 Před 7 lety +1

      Hernan Tasies he was incredible on defence but he has his faults. Was an overwhelming defender but didn't have as much finesse on that end and it led to foul trouble a lot. He did get better at it thought throughout his career but it was still evident.

    • @msl5253
      @msl5253 Před rokem

      @@socialminds9894
      Yeah. But it was his versatility on defense that made his so great/unique at it. He could check guards without having them blow by him, and even pick their pockets. He could guard his man well, and still change or block the shot of anyone else on the floor, including three point shots. He didn't leave his feet early, and could block several shots or players shots in a row. He would flash the rebounder (to slow down the fast break), and even steal the ball from them to. He could guard any position on the floor, anywhere on the floor (with maybe the exception 5' feet beyond the 3 point line 5X consecutive). He was an absolute beast on defense.

  • @MrCalidan69
    @MrCalidan69 Před 10 lety +20

    I grew up a Laker fan watching Kareem and became a huge Spurs (Tim Duncan) fan. Hakeem is the most skilled big man to ever play the game, barring none!!!!!

  • @dhjn4214
    @dhjn4214 Před 9 lety +228

    how do you guard this guy lol. When he gets the ball in the paint he's got 6 different moves with 6 different counter moves....you don't fall for his fake he will just shoot that jumper from the baseline. If you fall for his pump fake, he will just dunk on you. You guard him close, then he will just cross you. He has a lethal hook as well as a consistent jumper and an unguardable fadeaway. Great footwork and excellent body control. There is no way you can guard this guy. Impossible.

    • @darealliljable
      @darealliljable Před 6 lety

      dhjn4214 truth

    • @HCaulfield115
      @HCaulfield115 Před 5 lety +8

      Just had to pray he went for the fadeaway n missed lol

    • @Realyst
      @Realyst Před 5 lety +2

      Double team and hope he misses. One on one, it's not possible. Even against the double team he could spin baseline and shoot the fadeaway anyway.

    • @deafboricua21
      @deafboricua21 Před 5 lety +16

      He was basically Michael Jordan of center.

    • @skolnation4206
      @skolnation4206 Před 4 lety +1

      dhjn4214 nothing they could’ve done he did David Robison so dirty I never seen nothing like it

  • @sribble1
    @sribble1 Před 10 lety +23

    I lived in Houston the whole time Dream was there. As a ball player, I watched all the Rocket's games I could. To clear up some misconceptions:
    - Hakeem's Dream Shake was his little shoulder-shimmy before going right or left. It was not his simple catch and turn-over-right-shoulder baseline fade
    - His most money move was catch low left block and baby hook over his left shoulder from the middle of the lane
    - Hakeem liked the left block more so he could fade baseline over his right shoulder (easier for righties to do than left shoulder) without fear of a double team affecting the shot
    - The Rockets beat up on Jordan's Bulls. The SuperSonics gave them the most trouble, by far.
    - Hakeem was not a great open floor dribbler. If he took it coast to coast, it looked awkward, and he often traveled taking a 3rd step before dunking. In the half-court, he had a better handle on the ball.
    I loved the guy. He's on my all-time 1st team as the starting center.

    • @thefibrillator2927
      @thefibrillator2927 Před 5 lety +4

      "If he took it coast to coast, it looked awkward, and he often traveled taking a 3rd step before dunking."
      That's just a regular dunk in today's NBA.

    • @ATLienForLife
      @ATLienForLife Před 4 lety +1

      @@thefibrillator2927 Today they call it the Euro-step. Basically just allowing players to travel legally.

    • @3411Chad
      @3411Chad Před rokem

      Nice to see someone who understands nuance and knows what they're talking about; this assessment is spot on.

  • @yosoyplay
    @yosoyplay Před 6 lety +16

    I can proudly say “I watched the greatest center of all time” play and destroy all centers

  • @hartsickdisciple
    @hartsickdisciple Před 10 lety +221

    Olajuwon was the best center of all time. He played in an era of great big men, and tore them all up. In his 2nd year in the league, he got the Rockets to the finals against a truly great '86 Celtics team, and took them to 6 games. When Jordan retired the 1st time, we saw who the next best player was, with Hakeem leading the Rockets to 2 championships. He outplayed Parrish, Ewing, Robinson, Shaq, Mutombo, Mourning, you name it. Between about 1986 and 1997, he was the best center in the game. No disrespect to Kareem, who was still great late in his career. Wilt Chamberlain was the most statistically dominant big man of all time, but he had a massive physical advantage over most of the centers of his era. I can understand people thinking that maybe Wilt or Kareem were better than Olajuwon, but that's it. Shaq was a walking offensive foul who should have fouled out of almost every game. My pick is The Dream.

    • @hartsickdisciple
      @hartsickdisciple Před 9 lety +22

      gerizzyYMcrew Only once Hakeem was old and past him prime.

    • @hartsickdisciple
      @hartsickdisciple Před 9 lety +20

      gerizzyYMcrew I watched the games when they were being played. I've looked at the stats for both players, probably more than you have. Olajuwon was a far more complete player than Shaq. In the 95 finals, guess who tipped in the game winning basket in game 1? Olajuwon did it, slipping past Shaq. Who led the series in scoring? Shaq himself said that Hakeem "dusted his butt." Olajuwon was a truly complete player. That is something that Shaq never was. He depended on physical size and bulk to push people out of the way for a good percentage of his baskets. The refs were too afraid to call fouls.
      The only time that Shaq really got the best of him was once Olajuwon was old. Hakeem was even near the end of his prime when they played in 95.

    • @hartsickdisciple
      @hartsickdisciple Před 9 lety +7

      gerizzyYMcrew Define "inefficient." Also, take out anything 1997 or later. Hakeem was not the same player after the 95-96 season, versus anybody.

    • @anthonymason4149
      @anthonymason4149 Před 9 lety +13

      Hakeem is a center who can also play on the perimeter. His lower FG% doesn't mean he's inefficient. It means he has the skills to take perimeter shots - something that 90% of centers can't do consistently.

    • @anthonymason4149
      @anthonymason4149 Před 9 lety +11

      And in 95 hakeem outscored Shaq every game of the finals, had the game winner in Game 1 while Shaq didn't do anything in the clutch, and Shaq had twice as many turnovers as hakeem in the finals.

  • @s8helms1
    @s8helms1 Před 5 lety +12

    He's the all time leading shot blocker. 11th all time in points. 13th in Rebounds. But the thing that really impressed me, he's 8th all time in steals. 8th!!!! And he plays center!!! There was nobody quite like the Dream. Amazing.

    • @michaelbonhomme3677
      @michaelbonhomme3677 Před 2 lety

      Arguably the scariest NBA Athlete across 5 Categories💯
      Heard he had a slow start in the NBA though. Can’t imagine how he’d stack up with 2-3 hall of famers on his team in their prime💯 Give him an Isiah Thomas, Clyde Drexler, and Two First/Second Tier position players and a bet he retires with 5 Rings.
      Hell, Reggie Lewis and Len Bias brought up next to those strong but aging Celtics might have taken a ring from Jordan

  • @bryant475
    @bryant475 Před 10 lety +36

    Probably my favorite center ever: 21.8 ppg, 11.1 RPG, 2.5 APG, 3.1 BPG, 1.7 SPG. Truly an all around 5 category player. In fact only him and Andrei Kirilenko have ever had a 5x6: a game where you have at least 6 in the 5 positive categories above!

    • @bigdaddywbl
      @bigdaddywbl Před 10 lety +10

      gerizzyYMcrew True, but it's tough to compare centers from their era to the post-Bird/Magic era. Teams got bigger, the talent pool increased dramatically, rules changed, etc. Wilt and Russell wouldn't have the same kind of stat lines in the modern (80's-present) era. Olajuwon had the best combination of footwork, quickness, touch and size of all centers ever, imho. To me, he compares most closely to Russell, but a little bigger and more skilled offensively.

    • @sirulas
      @sirulas Před 10 lety +1

      gerizzyYMcrew their most of blocks will not count today's game because of goaltending

    • @nathalieleduc1675
      @nathalieleduc1675 Před 10 lety +3

      So true! The game changed from an era to another. Hakeem was the best center Ive saw, but Kareem, prime Sabonis and Wilt were great too.

    • @sirulas
      @sirulas Před 10 lety

      Nathalie Leduc Exactly. Also 3 point line rule and 3 seconds rule make more important the big men's role in game. Watch the battle of giants video(KAJ-WILT) you can easily realise the low basketball iq of Wilt. Wilt is not even top 5 center. Hakeem-Shaq-KAJ-Bill-Moses are better than him.

    • @jeroel7
      @jeroel7 Před 10 lety +4

      Amazing thing about Dream's career is he was even greater in the post season..15 post season years-scoring up to 26/game at 53%,3 assists/game

  • @jacktheripoff1888
    @jacktheripoff1888 Před 7 lety +74

    How great was he? He was drafted before Jordan and it was NEVER second guessed.
    In his second year he had the Rockets in the Finals, and though they fell short against Boston, everyone knew he was the best center in the game. And nearly a decade later he steamrolled through Robinson and Shaq just to make the point.

    • @DaxSports1
      @DaxSports1 Před 5 lety

      Dont forget Ewing!

    • @supervegito8513
      @supervegito8513 Před 5 lety +3

      Ewing was drafted a year later. And he took a backseat to Hakeem

    • @fuckthechinesevirus9462
      @fuckthechinesevirus9462 Před 4 lety

      @@DaxSports1 He owned Ewing in the Finals

    • @fuckthechinesevirus9462
      @fuckthechinesevirus9462 Před 4 lety

      He was a power forward in 1986

    • @DaxSports1
      @DaxSports1 Před 4 lety +2

      @@fuckthechinesevirus9462 Yeah he only mentioned shaq and Robinson. I meant dont forget he torched Ewing as well.

  • @waltersobchak854
    @waltersobchak854 Před 10 lety +24

    The BADDEST center in NBA history. Superior defense, unmatched low-post repertoire and ridiculous athleticism.

  • @MrInstrumentalist
    @MrInstrumentalist Před 10 lety +54

    Of note is the calibur of players that the Dream is domintaing. Patrick Ewing, D.Robinson, McHale, Bird, Robert Parish, a young strong Shaq (before the refs decided to let Shaq get away with offensive fouls for the rest of his career), Barkley, Magic Johnson. These are all hall of famers and considered some the best ever and Hakeem is making them look like they've never played ball before. Then there's Mutombo, Oakley, AC green and a whole host of defensive specialist getting taken to school.

    • @hazeddon
      @hazeddon Před 10 lety +4

      lol that interview where Robinson pretty much admitted that he couldn't stop hakeem just makes me laugh every time.

    • @alvaroandrespizzavarela878
      @alvaroandrespizzavarela878 Před 5 lety +1

      Alonzo Mourning too

    • @MozTheBoz
      @MozTheBoz Před 5 lety

      Indeed... He thrived on the era where the likes of the Bad Boys Pistons, the Knicks, the Celtics and Pacers frontline are what clogging his scoring area. For a center, he has a great perimeter game and was a dependable freethrow shooter unlike his peers. Also his strength is very underrated. The only weakness I can think of perhaps is his knees but then again he only had problems with it in his later years. The greatest center of all time in my book.

    • @msl5253
      @msl5253 Před rokem

      @@MozTheBoz
      Nice post.
      Yeah. Hakeem always played great defense as a foundation, and didn't always have to go wild offensively. But (yeah), whenever he played the top centers or Jordan, etc., he always had to put on an offensive show as well as a defensive one. LOL
      I agree: Best player I ever saw, and I watched him from his first season, and extensively in the playoffs during his early years (85+). He was killing them with the same, similar moves during his first and second season in the league. LMAO!!

  • @hwright85
    @hwright85 Před 10 lety +31

    In my opinion he is the greatest center, no one had ever seen a center move the way he did at the time and even today no one center could move like him!

    • @chachan7551
      @chachan7551 Před 4 lety

      Ashok Hegde Kareem is not even closed to more skilled.All he had over Hakeem is his sky hook and rings

  • @mytwitzworld
    @mytwitzworld Před 7 lety +43

    I love it when he puts the ball on the floor , dribbles, crosses, and puts it up... It's amazing , he looks like a shooting guard instead of a center

    • @blakecombs1219
      @blakecombs1219 Před 6 lety

      MyTwitzWorld I remember reading somewhere that Hakeem actually said when he faces up he believes that he is a small forward.

    • @SL-pg4dh
      @SL-pg4dh Před 3 lety

      I thought i was watching Jordan for a second. This is really what jordan would look like if he was 6 inch taller.

  • @brianandrewleahy1
    @brianandrewleahy1 Před 7 lety +16

    HOLY BEJESUS! He may be the greatest all-around center ever. I mean outside of the absolutely insane catalogue of moves here he was just as good defensively. His footwork, especially for a center, is so quick and fluid.......just perfection really. I watched this absolutely slack-jawed. How is this even possible? And you watch his training videos with Dwight Howard, Kobe Bryant and Lebron and even at 53 he is more precise and fluid than they are. Poetry in motion. Awesome post too!

  • @wizmanballin8498
    @wizmanballin8498 Před 7 lety +4

    Olajuwon...first NBA player to ever give life to the term "beast mode" on the court!

  • @rwndae
    @rwndae Před 5 lety +10

    7:07 that move is so difficult!
    Hakeem a top 3 defender of all time and top 5 of all time
    So fucking underrated man

    • @mateo3235
      @mateo3235 Před 4 lety

      From 7:07 to 7:48..that's some smoove as shit from a center man no matter what fkn era you playing in lol DR34M pretty much got every ga damn move lol

    • @trueliberty4537
      @trueliberty4537 Před 3 lety +1

      That move is sick for any player. For a rim protecting Center? Cmon it’s unreal.

  • @mytowntrill5441
    @mytowntrill5441 Před rokem +8

    0:40 that is the creation of the Dead-Leg Fadeaway that Dirk Nowitzki lived and died by BUT created by Hakeem Olajuwon. For Dirk it was his #1 go to move, for Hakeem it was his right side low-block #6 counter go to move. #LevelsToHisBag

  • @IvoryNerva
    @IvoryNerva Před 9 lety +14

    I just wanna say how much I appreciate you making this video. More people need to be made aware of how much skill - on top of super rare height and athleticism - it takes to play center or PF at its best.

    • @IvoryNerva
      @IvoryNerva Před 9 lety +1

      I've watched it 4-5 times easily. And your channel is awesome.

  • @Vito_Caligiuri
    @Vito_Caligiuri Před 3 lety +3

    Hakeem is the best big man of all time. His skill and footwork are just too deadly.

  • @theletterj
    @theletterj Před 10 lety +17

    Easily the most skilled offensive big ever. Arguably greatest overall.

  • @MukoroJr
    @MukoroJr Před 4 lety +9

    OMG there was none like him. He’s a beast🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @crashforce4686
    @crashforce4686 Před 8 lety +17

    hakeem olajuwon is the michael jordan of the center position

  • @djflax8806
    @djflax8806 Před 3 lety +6

    I was lucky enough to witness all this greatness growing up in Houston. Those 2 championships so much fun to live through. Clutch City what a ride. Best sports time of my life.

  • @Propain4eva
    @Propain4eva Před rokem +2

    Very versatile. Always a pleasure to watch because he was hard to predict

  • @Shittykitty2000
    @Shittykitty2000 Před 8 lety +7

    I had been watching basketball for almost 30 years when Hakeem retired & as a Rocket fan for all those years, I can honestly say, No center ever, could handle the ball like Hakeem did. He was like a 7' tall PG. not even mentioning his steals & blocked shots. Look up his steals & compare to the average Point guard

  • @absalom0412
    @absalom0412 Před 4 lety +4

    1:34. Sickest move of the video.

  • @thebrain1505
    @thebrain1505 Před 7 lety +9

    the only player in history who win a title alone, with an average team but in a great era...

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 4 lety

      Dirk also did that. But he was playing against one of the most shameful teams in NBA history, they were partially mentally broken (LeBron was completely melted, his soul left his body). Still, Dirk played like a God. Hakeem played like a God his entire career, then he played like a Titan in 94 and 95

  • @andrewchan1837
    @andrewchan1837 Před 9 lety +5

    Cant imagine him playing in his prime in this generations league. 90's defense is so physical while today's era is just soft, Hakeem surely will beasting and feasting todays players.

  • @montefioreoralsurgery5066
    @montefioreoralsurgery5066 Před 10 lety +6

    i was fortunate enough to watch olajuwon throughout his career...during his prime years from 93-95 there is no one player i would choose over hakeem...that 95 team with drexler kept getting better and better as the playoffs mushed on...when they faced the magic in the finals i would argue that no team in history could defeat them in a 7 game series

  • @RRRRRRRRR33
    @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 10 lety +43

    Pound for pound, the most skilled bball player in history.

    • @RobShelley84
      @RobShelley84 Před 9 lety

      I'd back off that "pound for pound" part. That means he'd not only have to be the most skilled, but SIGNIFICANTLY more skilled than a Chris Paul or Michael Jordan to make up the pound-for-pound ratio.

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 9 lety +5

      Well, basketball is a game focused 100% in size, right? If you want a good ratio of overall skill in a player, the size should be considered the equalizer. There many examples: Jordan is the unanimously best perimeter player in basketball, right? But in his size/weight range, he is not the most skilled. Kobe is far more skilled than him, better handles, passing ability, range, etc... Big guys who relies on sheer strength like Shaq or even LeBron shouldn't even be considered "skilled" in this scenario. So, if you make a pound for pound situation only considering the finesse skills of the player and using the size as equalizer, Hakeem is far more skilled than anyone else. And this could be considered both ways, Iverson and Barkley has this kind of higher skill standards because their diminuted height limited them considerably. Hakeem basically moves like D-Wade, footwork of a guard, crossovers, steals, blocks, etc... This kind of combined traits is something that you don't see in any basketball player of any size, its basically something exclusive to him.

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 9 lety +2

      Chris Paul is a incredible talented player, but in his size range, the NBA has many examples of skilled players. Pond for pound, my opinion, the most talented players are basically a draw between Olajuwon and Magic, with Iverson and Bird right behind them. Jordan for me don't even qualifies on a "top 5" regarding pure skill/talent because he had elite athleticism in his entire career. Some could say that athletic ability can be considered a form of "skill", but I respectly disagree with that. Pure skill should be put in a special paradigm, you see athletic freaks every day in college and even on street ball level, but a pure skilled player like Olajuwon is something incredibly rare.

    • @Amjbmcg
      @Amjbmcg Před 9 lety

      Pound for Pound doesn't work for big players. They are at a disadvantage because they weigh more pounds.

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 9 lety +2

      ***** Of course, the extra pounds limits their movements. The pound for pound scenario works in this situation because even with this limitation, Olajuwon still was capable to move like a guard. For that he needed even more skill. The same scenario is applied to Iverson, only inverting the extra pounds of the bigger player compared to a very small player with fewer pounds. If the guy is capable to dominate even with those disadvantaged, that qualities him even more. Don't you agree?

  • @djg34djg
    @djg34djg Před 9 lety +5

    1:15 that is rare for a center to do that. Hakeem to me is the best Center ever.

  • @elijahwilkey8036
    @elijahwilkey8036 Před 7 lety +18

    Dirk's One Legged Fadeaway my foot. Hakeem had been doing that move long before Dirk stept foot in the NBA

  • @Antbeast23
    @Antbeast23 Před 9 lety +27

    i almost had an heart attack when i got him in a pack in nba 2k14 my team

    • @koba2209
      @koba2209 Před 5 lety

      Did he had HOF ankle breaker?? 😂😂😂

  • @det4ever94
    @det4ever94 Před 8 lety +46

    If he was playing today. Nobody could stop him! Today game is so small. He would dominate the small game now days.

    • @KyleHurd
      @KyleHurd Před 8 lety +2

      Complete and utter domination! Who's gonna guard him, faith D Howard?

    • @DukeThaBlackGuy
      @DukeThaBlackGuy Před 8 lety

      Hakeem Olajuwon was only 6'9/6'10. Most centers in the NBA today are 7'0. Howard may be the only center under 6'11.

    • @YouCanCallMeLizzy
      @YouCanCallMeLizzy Před 8 lety +6

      +Just a Guy Hakeem was 7'0. That's what makes him so remarkable. 7'0 feet with the ability to isolate from beyond the 3 pt line. Amazing. And he dominated the Prime Orlando shaq.

    • @DukeThaBlackGuy
      @DukeThaBlackGuy Před 8 lety +1

      YouCanCallMeLizzy He wasn't 7'0.. He pointed out he was undersized just like Dwight.

    • @YouCanCallMeLizzy
      @YouCanCallMeLizzy Před 8 lety +1

      +Just a Guy Bruh. he was every bit of 7'0. LeBron is close to 6'9. No way in the world you sayin LeBron is close in height to hakeem. I'm 35. I seen Hakeem.

  • @MrYoumitube
    @MrYoumitube Před 10 lety +18

    Thanks Hakeem, you just made me dizzy after watching this video.

  • @gorzz2487
    @gorzz2487 Před 5 lety +2

    @ 2:24 perfect foot placement and foot work. Keeping it out of the pant and pivot back in. Phenomenal.

  • @SantiagoRaga1975
    @SantiagoRaga1975 Před 10 lety +2

    Hakeem and Barry Sanders have a lot in common. Both are once in a lifetime true originals as far as their skill sets go. The way they move, what they bring to the table. Such a pleasure watching them do their craft.

  • @skaterunite
    @skaterunite Před 10 lety +13

    What a legend. This man has moves that all positions are using today, except he combines all of them. He has carmelos up and under, has Rondo's fake, has Tim Duncan's hook. All the players I listed above must've learned one thing from him. Poor Dwight Howard is now officially a coward center. Lol

    • @Justs99171
      @Justs99171 Před 10 lety +5

      I think the up and under was McHale's move. I always heard it attributed to him. Hakeem's move was the dream shake. Everything else, he got from someone else.

    • @mtbrider6119
      @mtbrider6119 Před 10 lety +1

      Justs99171 The "dream shake" has nothing to do with the way he finished - it just means that he was able to fake and shake players off to create the space he needed to take his shot.

  • @OS1540
    @OS1540 Před 10 lety +5

    Strength + Finesse = Olajuwon

  • @filipbrza
    @filipbrza Před 7 lety +2

    So beautiful. Every true basketball fan knows that Hakeem is the greatest center of all times

  • @kristiaanhabacon7680
    @kristiaanhabacon7680 Před 11 lety +1

    He's already into his move a split second before he catches. Masterful.

  • @Vibestr
    @Vibestr Před 8 lety +12

    jumping off the weak foot which starts around 6:00 is a move that nba players like Dirk, Kobe, KD use.

  • @These10Things
    @These10Things Před 7 lety +3

    Hakeem to me in the Greatest and most Skilled Center that has ever played in the NBA. For several reasons. 1. Footwork. As a basketball coach for 9 year footwork is key to any players success and he by far has the best footwork I have ever seen from a center. 2. Dominance. This guy played against Many hall of fame centers, Kareem, Ewing, Shaq, Ect. and he dominated all of them. Don't believe me.... watch what he did to Shaq and Ewing in back to back finals. 3. Skills. How many big men could start at the foul like and blow by their defenders off the dribble and it looks as smooth as a guard. In his era it was only him. He was so skilled. 4. Intelligence. He knew the game. He knew how important footwork was, and he knew how to out smart his opponent. Used ball fakes head fakes shoulder fakes better than anyone. 5. 2 way player. The man not only was an elite offensive player, but he was also an elite defender.

  • @marcellowheeler88
    @marcellowheeler88 Před 6 lety +2

    Hakeem was a walking real life cheat code in the greatest era of the NBA.

  • @travisedmondson3227
    @travisedmondson3227 Před 10 lety +4

    Basketball is a beautiful sport to watch when executed properly, and Hakeem Olajuwon is probably the most aesthetically pleasing offensive player in the history of the game

    • @deafboricua21
      @deafboricua21 Před 5 lety

      Travis Edmondson what happens to the NBA today? Almost everyone is shooting 3 after 3 now. It sucks. Only LaMarcus Aldridge keeps the 90s style alive.

  • @CharifRocka
    @CharifRocka Před 10 lety +4

    this is UNREAL. I forgot Dream use to cross dudes up. Like watching Coltrane play the sax man. Genius in motion

  • @metspin1
    @metspin1 Před 10 lety +5

    10:21 was sick.

  • @johndailey2323
    @johndailey2323 Před 4 lety +9

    Bulls fan here. Olajuwon just like Pippen was robbed of defensive player of the year in favor of others. Hakeem had over 200 steals and 200 blocks in a season and they wrongfully gave Jordan defensive player of the year

    • @ATLienForLife
      @ATLienForLife Před 4 lety

      I agree. That's an example of The Jordan Rules.

    • @mateo3235
      @mateo3235 Před 4 lety +1

      No doubt..that foo should've had like 6 of them hos lol GOAT defensively..him and MJ best 2 way players I ever got to see play

  • @jessieroden7465
    @jessieroden7465 Před 6 lety +2

    He had the nicest inside shot as any player I ever seen,that's when the NBA had the big boys,Patrick Ewing also had as nice of jump shot he was my opinion one of the better shooting big men to NBA was so amazing to watch at the time it was special
    It doesn't have the magic any more

  • @ioanniskokras61
    @ioanniskokras61 Před 8 lety +5

    .. quard in a power forward's body, forced to play center.No1 pick 5 years after touching the ball for the first time!!!!(it's true). Played most of his time with 2 or 3 players quarding him on his attempts... underrated.. one of the very very bests

  • @kingjames6203
    @kingjames6203 Před 9 lety +16

    he had the most unique game ever

    • @Capdirtbag
      @Capdirtbag Před 9 lety +1

      bernard james You are so correct! I cant imagine anyone duplicating his moves!

    • @kingjames6203
      @kingjames6203 Před 9 lety

      Marvel and DC Fan man jahlil okafor might, just might

    • @calvinletigre7687
      @calvinletigre7687 Před 8 lety

      Marvel and DC Fan man demarcus could if he was more humble

    • @kingjames6203
      @kingjames6203 Před 8 lety +3

      Billy Mormand hell no, not even remotely close, like hahahahahahah, not at all

  • @allblack33
    @allblack33 Před 10 lety +17

    Hakeem Olajuwon in my opinion IS the greatest Center of All-time period. name me another center who can get the ball from 20 feet and be a triple threat.

    • @diggyzeus186
      @diggyzeus186 Před 10 lety

      kareem is the stats don't lie

    • @htown1283
      @htown1283 Před 9 lety +1

      And he's the all-time leader in blocks.

    • @diggyzeus186
      @diggyzeus186 Před 9 lety

      do yourself a favor and go and find out who the all-time leading points scorer in nba history is.

    • @htown1283
      @htown1283 Před 9 lety +4

      Yea, Kareem is the all-time leading scorer. But u have 4 other players on the floor that can score. What those other four players can't do is shutdown the paint like Olajuwon.

    • @CarbonComs
      @CarbonComs Před 9 lety

      simon pita Scoring isn't the only thing that decides the best player. In that case is Durant better than LeBron because he averages more points?

  • @bob69075
    @bob69075 Před 9 lety +3

    Best center to ever play the game of Basketball. I am glad I was able to watch him through out his career.

  • @zenmar84
    @zenmar84 Před 6 lety +16

    The guy has one of the best footwork that the center position has ever had and his offensive repertoire on the low block is the best. He also got the job done defensively even if he was not a tall center.

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 4 lety

      Job done? The guy is the alltime leader in blocks and a top 10 in steals, lol he doesn't do the job, he is the best defensive center that ever played. His defense is actually better than his offense.

    • @zenmar84
      @zenmar84 Před 4 lety

      @@RRRRRRRRR33 well blocks weren't counted during bill Russell's day.

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 4 lety

      @@zenmar84 Russell had the same wingspan of Trevor Ariza and the man himself said he played a different game (West and Oscar said the same thing, only Wilt brags about his era). So, it's counterproductive for us to compare these guys with modern players considering even they don't do that. It's common logic really.

    • @zenmar84
      @zenmar84 Před 4 lety

      @@RRRRRRRRR33 but we can only judge them by the era that they played and he was head and shoulder above defensively during his time (it also help i guess that wilt didnt totally focus his energy in that area) btw im not disputing that hakeem is great defensively, but your reasoning why he is which is his stats is not yet being recorded during bills time.

    • @msl5253
      @msl5253 Před rokem

      @@zenmar84
      Yeah. But like Russell: Olajuwon's DEFENSE goes way beyond his stats and block shots. I don't think Russell could do what Olajuwon did (unless you saw him do it). For starters: Olajuwon could guard any position on the floor, anywhere on the floor. I've seen it many times. Guards don't blow by him up top when caught on a switch, and many times he steals the ball from them.
      He always flashed the rebounder to slow down the fast break, and many times he'd steal the ball from them to for a basket.
      Of course he could guard his own guy, but he was also capable (while guarding his own guy) to get to anyone else on the court, without losing his guy, while not getting beat on the inside pass often. Down low (like Russell) he terrorized the opposition to change and pass up shots more often than he blocked, because most weren't going to try to shoot if they knew he was there. Best player I ever seen, cause I watched him a lot from the end of his first season, including when they demolished the defending champion Lakers in 86, when he went crazy (before Drugs and Injuries decimated them from many potential championships), losing to another all time great Celtics team in 6 games.

  • @avrysportsshow
    @avrysportsshow Před 9 lety +6

    I still can't believe Hakeem was a center with the moves that he had, dude was incredible for Houston.

  • @HD_YT
    @HD_YT Před 4 lety +1

    I first watched this video 5 years ago when it had 100k, maybe 200k views. It now has 1.6M, and is still a beauty to watch

  • @chorrellpique4057
    @chorrellpique4057 Před 8 lety +2

    The GOAT post player! Thank you for making me watch sports daily grandma.

  • @CapitalJ2
    @CapitalJ2 Před 10 lety +5

    0:34 just plain sick!

  • @luboya48
    @luboya48 Před 10 lety +33

    Hakeem over Kareem

    • @ATLienForLife
      @ATLienForLife Před 4 lety

      I agree! Most Kareem Abdul Jabbar followers don't want to remember that Kareem never won any of his Championships without at least one other HOF player as a teammate. With the Lakers, he never had less than 2 HOF teammates. And get this, there were THREE seasons where Kareem had FOUR Hall of Fame teammates! Counting hm, that's a total of FIVE HOFs on one team! And he only won 1 out of 3 Championships.

  • @mrsrandommademedoit3387
    @mrsrandommademedoit3387 Před 5 lety +1

    Hakeem Olajuwon is the best center to ever play basketball. FULL STOP..
    The most complete Center to ever play, he could do it ALL and don't forget about his defense!

  • @jwpolar
    @jwpolar Před 9 lety +7

    Wilt Chamberlain I can't really make an opinion on considering he's just from too long ago. However, as much respect as I have for Kareem, he didn't have the moves that Hakeem did. Kareem had the best sky hook and the most unguardable move in NBA history. Hakeem is just so more versatile and could NOT be stopped on most of his moves. He can find many ways to score. One of the best centers of all time hands down.

    • @kobenottop1003
      @kobenottop1003 Před 8 lety +1

      *****
      Wilt never owned Russell. Wilt put up big stats simply because he went out of his way to chase stats instead of helping his team win
      "Chamberlain was concerned about Chamberlain. He was in love with his stats."
      - Red Auerbach
      "He got a stat sheet at half time and he'd come over and question whether or not he got enough rebounds"
      - Chick Hearn
      "It wasn't a matter of Wilt vs. Russell with Bill. It was a matter of who won."
      - John Havlicek
      "Bill Russell understood how to make his team better. I don't think Wilt ever really understood that"
      - Paul Westphal
      *1962 EDF vs Russell* - after Wilt's 50 ppg 26 rpg season
      Game 1 - Wilt 12 pts in first half... down 15 at half time... Wilt pads his stats in garbage time to 33 as the Celtics keep blowing them out
      Game 3 - Russell outscored and out rebounded Wilt 21-14 to 13-11, and they were up 20 at half time... Wilt pads his stats in garbage time as they lost
      Game 5 - Wilt 11 points on 4/13 FG in first half (31%) and outrebuounded 11-9 by Russell
      then he pads his stats in the 2nd half after being down 20+ at half time
      Game 7 - no garbage time, so no chance to pad stats
      Wilt only had 22 points (28 ppg below average), out rebounded by Russell 22-21 and sent home as Sam Jones hit the game winner over Wilt

    • @DJVijilante
      @DJVijilante Před 8 lety

      Most of Wilt's stats I believe and could be wrong, came after Russell's Celts had the game sealed.

  • @georgeguevara74
    @georgeguevara74 Před 6 lety +5

    Im sad because this guy didn't get much respect... he's the best for me and I would pick him against any other best centers to ever play the game... long live THE DREAM... and you must teach joel embiid THE PROCESS so he can bring back those good old times were bigman truly dominates the paint. A fan from the Philippines

  • @mezanine10
    @mezanine10 Před 5 lety +5

    8:36 - Greatest front court ever. Olajuwon doubled team by Bird and McHale...spins out of that and dunks on the Chief.

    • @ATLienForLife
      @ATLienForLife Před 4 lety +1

      Preach!

    • @msl5253
      @msl5253 Před rokem +1

      @Trump
      And that was in his 2nd year, during the 86 NBA finals. SMH

  • @cschnei2014
    @cschnei2014 Před 9 lety +9

    Watching him burn Ewing like that is unreal. He makes Patrick look like an absolute chump and Ewing was a great defender. Not a good defender, a GREAT defender. But Dream just seems to have him on strings like a puppet.

    • @ATLienForLife
      @ATLienForLife Před 4 lety +1

      And the way he totally humiliated David Robinson was just crazy!

  • @mytowntrill5441
    @mytowntrill5441 Před 9 lety +25

    Anyone wants to know wear Dirk Nowitzki gets his 1-legged fall-a-way from, then just look at the move at 0:37.

    • @coolmauricenapper
      @coolmauricenapper Před 5 lety +1

      Mytown Trill why was I thinking that

    • @samderrida
      @samderrida Před 4 lety +1

      Exactly. Hakeem did it first. Wonder did Dirk see that?

  • @7LamarOdom
    @7LamarOdom Před 8 lety +4

    his moves are so fluid, gracful and flawless its like he's humiliating the opposition with his skill and footwork, true master.

  • @potentially__9445
    @potentially__9445 Před 6 lety +59

    Hakeem Olajuwon FLAT OUT EMBARRASSED David Robinson. DAMN!!!!!!

  • @antoniomontana9517
    @antoniomontana9517 Před 5 lety +1

    What a speed for a center !!!

  • @416Raps
    @416Raps Před 9 lety +2

    Hakeem is the most versatile Center of all-time. He can play like a guard...crossover dribble, fade-away, shimmy shake and can pass like a PG. And then he can eat you in the post like baby-food, spin off the catch, catch fade-away, spin-off dunk, pump fake finger-roll. And I'd say his fakes were absolute best in the league, pump fake, fake pass, fake off the dribble then pump fake and then step-through. Unbelievable... Greatest Center of all-time

  • @FreeeeBeer
    @FreeeeBeer Před 10 lety +22

    There has not been anybody who has a post game like Hakeem. He is the best big man down low of all time for sure. There will never be another like him because they all focus on flashy moves nowadays and don't develop any solid fundamentals.
    Why do you think Lebron went to him on hands and knees begging for tips? Lebron knows the old players were all just better than him and anyone in the league.

    • @GrahamCStrouse
      @GrahamCStrouse Před 10 lety +2

      kingcam0775 MChale was actually kinda simila. He was taller and longer but not nearly as quick. The speed with which Dream moves down low is just unreal.

    • @kubr1ck36
      @kubr1ck36 Před 9 lety

      FreeeeBeer The only other guy with a post game like Hakeem is Jordan.

    • @jaysondeguzman2467
      @jaysondeguzman2467 Před 9 lety

      Have you ever heard of kevin mchale??

    • @GrahamCStrouse
      @GrahamCStrouse Před 9 lety +2

      McHale had a sweet, sweet post game.

    • @bugsy101073
      @bugsy101073 Před 9 lety +2

      Mchale is the only matchup with Hakeem at the low post. Both are unguardable. 85~86' seasons are the glory days at the painted area

  • @kdawg3484
    @kdawg3484 Před 10 lety +5

    This was a wonderful showcase of the incredible amount of offensive ability Hakeem had. You did a fantastic job. If you ever feel like it, I'd love to see a similar video of Dream's defensive skills. Most blocked shots of all time by a huge margin. Top ten all time in steals, which would be impossible to believe for a center if it weren't Hakeem. Easily the most complete center of all time.

  • @davidrivas305
    @davidrivas305 Před 9 lety +5

    Dreams post moves were just amazing...

  • @mako4874
    @mako4874 Před 9 lety +8

    i think i ve watched and rewetted those dream moves against admiral about 30 times in the past few years. never gets old. just perfection in terms of footwork, so smooth, so quick, perfect rhythm. people talk about fundamentals and footwork and teach it now- but before dream, nobody moved like that in the post, they're teaching what dream invented and perfected man. the way he placed his pivot foot and faked and spun off it in perfect rhythm. beauty. poetry man .

  • @moesephxd91
    @moesephxd91 Před 10 lety +7

    soccer gave him is unreal footwork

  • @FranciscoReyes-uu7hg
    @FranciscoReyes-uu7hg Před 8 lety +32

    Ahhh no more centers like him in the nba anymore.

    • @tyler8447
      @tyler8447 Před 8 lety +20

      never been a center like him :/

    • @adamkoshkuson3640
      @adamkoshkuson3640 Před 7 lety

      Tim duncan? Oh wait..... He gone lol

    • @Dwaynoe_ball
      @Dwaynoe_ball Před 7 lety +1

      +adam koshkuson Tim Duncan was a power forward

    • @prodchxpo
      @prodchxpo Před 7 lety +5

      joel embiid!

    • @paulval7108
      @paulval7108 Před 7 lety +2

      Not saying he's as good as the Dream but Cousins is of the few really good big men. He is in my opinion the most skilled center in the game today. Can do everything very well particularly on the offensive end. That being said no one comes close at the center position at overall skill today or in the past as Hakeem.

  • @samndambuki6810
    @samndambuki6810 Před 8 lety +6

    5:50 "Who has an answer for the greatest player on the planet?"

  • @ballafasho332
    @ballafasho332 Před 10 lety +2

    We see where my favorite player ever Jordan got all his post moves. DAMN

  • @scifitoilet
    @scifitoilet Před 8 lety +13

    Hakeem is the most skilled Center. The quickness, the footwork, the finesse and a library of moves. How do you guard someone so fluid in his movements. Hakeem is like water, you block him one way and he just goes around you. Hell in that last clip a quadruple team couldnt stop him. wtf a quadruple team, who could command a QUADRUPLE TEAM.

  • @Nirky
    @Nirky Před 10 lety +38

    I think one on one, Olajuwon is the one person Jordan could not consistently beat.

    • @lukebrumit2605
      @lukebrumit2605 Před 6 lety +5

      Nirky no there r many players jordan would lose to one on one, a lot of players that r way bigger and taller

    • @deafboricua21
      @deafboricua21 Před 5 lety

      brum brum daddy can you name them?

    • @well.thy.one.
      @well.thy.one. Před 5 lety

      Jhonathan Cosme Steph

    • @yimbaiyoko
      @yimbaiyoko Před 4 lety

      @@deafboricua21 any all time great big man

  • @brianboydhou
    @brianboydhou Před 8 lety +2

    Why doesn't he get more recognition? He did early in his career, after 3 final Fours with the Phi Slamma Jamma, then in 86 Hakeem destroyed the Defending Champion Lakers in the West Finals. Hakeem was a monster, none of the Laker Post players could stop him. That the one the Where Sampson hit the series winner. They played Boston and lost in 6 games. Next season they lost two players to drug suspensions then Sampson knee problems. The Rockets fail to a 40 win team every year. Rockets failed to put anyone around him. Hakeem was amazing. He would score with 4 guys all over him constantly. Then they got Thorpe, Horry, Maxwell, Kenny smith, and Mario Elie and Sam Cassell in the early 90s the team became a contender again. Had he had the talent the Spurs had in Duncan's career he would have more a bunch of titles. NO QUESTION. But because of the teams he played on from 87 till 93, the press looks at other players. I hate it when people tell me Duncan was better. NO WAY! To me Hakeem was the greatest Center of all time. Micheal Jordan wasthe G.O.A.T. Imagine if Hakeem and Jordan could play in todays NBA with no handchecking by the defence they would kill everybody that guards them). But Hakeem was a monster, nightmare of other players and coaches. Just glad young generations can see him on youtube and appreciate him like me and my friends did growing up in Htown

  • @MrLakersfan1
    @MrLakersfan1 Před 10 lety +1

    I just love watching this guy man. I used to hate being the center because I never had any post moves and I'd always be the one being yelled at for shooting 3's when I was a big man. After watching his videos and studying his post moves, I now enjoy the one very thing I hated before...being a center.